Significado
To go completely wrong.
Contexto cultural
Finns use 'voimasanoja' (power words) like helvetti to release stress. It is part of the 'sisu' culture—being honest about how hard things are. Similar to Swedish 'åt helvete', reflecting a shared Lutheran heritage where 'hell' became the standard baseline for a bad place. In many Finnish IT companies, this phrase is used almost technically to describe a failed deployment or a major bug. Younger generations might use the English 'fail' or 'epic fail', but 'päin helvettiä' remains the 'gold standard' for expressing true Finnish frustration.
Know your audience
Never use this with your boss unless you have a very close, informal relationship. Stick to 'mennä mönkään'.
Add 'ihan' for effect
Adding 'ihan' (quite/totally) before 'päin' makes you sound much more like a native speaker: 'Meni ihan päin helvettiä'.
Significado
To go completely wrong.
Know your audience
Never use this with your boss unless you have a very close, informal relationship. Stick to 'mennä mönkään'.
Add 'ihan' for effect
Adding 'ihan' (quite/totally) before 'päin' makes you sound much more like a native speaker: 'Meni ihan päin helvettiä'.
The 'Pine Tree' trick
If you start saying 'päin hel...' and realize you shouldn't swear, quickly switch to 'päin mäntyä'. Finns do this too!
Ponte a prueba
Fill in the missing verb in the correct past tense form.
Eilinen tentti ______ päin helvettiä.
'Eilinen' (yesterday) requires the past tense 'meni'.
Which of these is the polite version of the phrase?
If you are at work, you should say things went...
'Päin mäntyä' (against the pine tree) is the standard polite euphemism.
Match the situation to the most natural reaction.
Your phone falls into the lake and you lose all your photos.
A total loss of data is a classic 'päin helvettiä' moment.
Complete the dialogue.
A: Miten loma meni? B: No, satoi koko ajan ja auto hajosi. Kaikki ______.
The context of rain and a broken car indicates a disaster.
🎉 Puntuación: /4
Ayudas visuales
Levels of Failure in Finnish
Polite
- • Mennä pieleen
- • Epäonnistua
Neutral
- • Mennä mönkään
- • Mennä päin mäntyä
Slang
- • Mennä päin helvettiä
- • Mennä päin persettä
Banco de ejercicios
4 ejerciciosEilinen tentti ______ päin helvettiä.
'Eilinen' (yesterday) requires the past tense 'meni'.
If you are at work, you should say things went...
'Päin mäntyä' (against the pine tree) is the standard polite euphemism.
Your phone falls into the lake and you lose all your photos.
A total loss of data is a classic 'päin helvettiä' moment.
A: Miten loma meni? B: No, satoi koko ajan ja auto hajosi. Kaikki ______.
The context of rain and a broken car indicates a disaster.
🎉 Puntuación: /4
Preguntas frecuentes
4 preguntasIn Finnish, it is considered a 'mild' swear word. It's common in daily speech but still inappropriate for formal settings.
No, this idiom is for situations or plans. If you say a person 'menee päin helvettiä', it doesn't make much sense.
'Mennä pieleen' or 'epäonnistua' are the most neutral and polite ways to say something went wrong.
The preposition 'päin' in this idiomatic sense requires the partitive case.
Frases relacionadas
mennä mönkään
synonymto go wrong
mennä pieleen
synonymto go wrong / to miss the mark
mennä päin mäntyä
similarto go against the pine tree
haistattaa helvetit
builds onto tell someone to go to hell